From their GitHub page: "ChaiScript is one of the only embedded scripting language designed from the ground up to directly target C++ and take advantage of modern C++ development techniques, working with the developer how they would expect it to work. Being a native C++ application, it has some advantages over existing embedded scripting languages:
It uses a header-only approach, which makes it easy to integrate with existing projects.
It maintains type safety between your C++ application and the user scripts.
It supports a variety of C++ techniques including callbacks, overloaded functions, class methods, and stl containers."
And so marks the end of the std::graphics era. I originally thought it was a good idea, but now agree that a graphics API like that has no place in standardisation.
I'm excited by this feature, along with all the other compile-time programming stuff (reflection, concepts). The downside I see is having to remember how a metatype works.. e.g., the default access type for member variables of struct, class, interface, value, .. and on and on. But if we keep the number of metatypes low, this may manageable.
It uses a header-only approach, which makes it easy to integrate with existing projects.
It maintains type safety between your C++ application and the user scripts.
It supports a variety of C++ techniques including callbacks, overloaded functions, class methods, and stl containers."